Press Releases

Single Shot video presentation

single shot

Single Shot is a national touring presentation of short films. Curated by London based Video and Film Umbrella, Single Shot arrives in Birmingham to be shown at a number of significant locations. In consultation with the Ikon Gallery we are delighted that Margaret Street has been selected to show nine films on the plasma screeen in the main concourse space.

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Joie de Faire (the making of stuff) PUBLIC EVENT

Wednesday 29 November 2-4pm, Margaret Street - Lecture Room

joie de fairejoie de faire is a conversation between

  • artist Françoise Dupré, Lecturer at the Department of Art
  • Stuart Davie, Director of Paintings in Hospitals
  • Kate Broom, practitioner in the social/therapeutic uses of art and Course Director of the new MA Art, Health and Well-Being at the Department of Art

The conversation will be followed by an open public discussion

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Know your place

Know your place
A Midwest events programme in Birmingham:
Wed 7, Thurs 8, Fri 9 March 1830 – 2200: UCE, Margaret Street
Mon 14 & Tues 15 May 1000 – 1700: 22 Green Street

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Art Becomes You - Book Release

Pastiche and the Politics of Art: Materiality in a Post Material Paradigm.
Editors: Henry Rogers & Aaron Williamson

art becomes you - coverart becomes you - coverThis exciting new publication investigates the role of art and the artist in the 21st century and the political and ethical possibilities that relationship may hold. Arguably much current ‘practice’ is in a position where the creation of an object, an artwork, is either no longer enough or appropriate as a response to the perceived conditions of what may constitute art. In this publication, which has been developed from the ABY conference held at BIAD in 2004, we have invited writers of international repute: Amelia Jones, Judith Halberstam, Thyrza Nichols Goodeve, Jim Mooney, Pen Dalton, Stephen Whittle, Laurence Harvey and Aaron Williamson to address the issue that the work of art may well be considered more as a ‘relation’ than a ‘substance’, as that which may operate ‘differently’ within the social space. In relationship to this we invited writers to explore ideas of parody and pastiche in relationship to politics and the potential work of art. Sarat Maharaj chaired the event and makes a significant contribution to the discussion within the publication.

The various contributions explore how and in what ways the material status of art is transformed through a consideration of, on the one hand, the artist’s own subjective identifications, and on the other, by performative and process-based approaches to making art. It aims to further the contemporary claims of performative, postmaterial forms of art such as performance, video art, time-based, digital art and installation through contextualising these developments in relation to an increasing emphasis on the specific qualities and circumstances of the artist’s own presence in the act of making art. By refuting the distancing of objective, disinterested artists from their artwork, this publication aims to discover how the artist’s ‘lived experience’ offers a locus for the viewer’s own activation as a particular, rather than universal, subject. Here, the work of art becomes a transient set of relations that includes the viewer as a central component in the work and its dispersal. Furthermore we may consider the performative self fashioning of ‘other’ bodies that arguably demand a different under- standing of what constitutes performance and art. With these things in mind in what ways can we fully interpret the statement that ‘art becomes you’?

This publication is available from Article Press at www.articlepress.co.uk and is distributed by Central Books, London.

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